The Internet Archive discovers and captures web pages through many different web crawls.
At any given time several distinct crawls are running, some for months, and some every day or longer.
View the web archive through the Wayback Machine.

A senior Bank of England official
yesterday warned that the
break-up of the euro would ‘overwhelm’
the UK as the global economy
took a turn for the worse.

Adam Posen said Europe – and
in particular Germany – would be
‘ill-advised’ to force Greece to quit
the euro and let the single currency
collapse.

It came as Greek Prime Minister
Antonis Samaras embarked on a
four-day charm offensive with a
desperate plea for more time to
deal with the country’s debts.

With time running out, Posen
said: ‘If the eurozone were to
break up it would overwhelm the
UK economy in ways we could not
really do very much about.’

Treasury estimates suggest that
the collapse of the euro could lead
to a 7pc plunge in economic output
in Britain – worth £100bn.
Posen’s warning came amid fears
over the future of Greece and the
health of the global economy.

In the US, the non-partisan Congressional
Budget Office said the
American economy will plunge
into a double-dip recession if the
looming ‘fiscal cliff’ is not tackled,
with the economy shrinking 0.5pc
next year and unemployment
soaring above 9pc.

Tensions mounting: Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras will meet German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande in the coming days

The Federal Reserve hinted it
was ready to unleash another
round of stimulus if the malaise
deepens.

Officials in Tokyo said Japanese
exports were 8.1pc lower in July
than a year earlier – the biggest
slump in six months – as shipments
to Europe and China
tumbled.

Figures tomorrow are set to confirm
that Britain is trapped in a
double-dip recession – although
the Office for National Statistics
is expected to say the slump in
the second quarter of the year
was not as bad as the 0.7pc initially
reported.

Posen said the UK economy was
‘stagnating’ but added that falling
unemployment indicated it was in
a better shape than the official
figures suggest.

‘We are not in complete recession
as the private sector is adding
jobs,’ he said.

The American economist, who
joined the MPC in September
2009, said soaring borrowing costs
in Spain and Italy were ‘undermining
the eurozone and the
world economy’.

Referring to the European Central
Bank’s pledge to do ‘whatever
it takes’ to save the euro, Posen
said: ‘I wish they would get on
with it.’

And with tensions between Berlin
and Athens mounting, he said
overseeing a break-up would be ‘a
self-inflicted wound of huge proportions’
for Germany.

Samaras will meet German
Chancellor Angela Merkel and
French President Francois Hollande
in the coming days having
held talks with Jean-Claude
Juncker, head of the eurogroup,
last night.